Convenience Stores Found Selling Alcohol To Underage Drinkers

Minors who want to buy beer or wine in Spokane can find a place to do it.

That’s the conclusion of a recent undercover sting by police and state liquor regulators that targeted 45 of the city’s convenience stores.

Clerks in 17 of those stores - nearly 38 percent - sold alcohol to underage volunteers working with the police and state Liquor Control Board without checking identification, police spokesman Dick Cottam said.

“Alcohol is related to a significant number of teenage deaths,” Grandinetti said.

In 1994, more than 40 percent of 15- to 20-year-olds killed in traffic accidents nationwide were drinking beforehand, according to figures provided by the Spokane County engineer’s office.

Earlier this year, 16-year-old Anna Sherman died in a car collision in the Spokane Valley. Authorities believe the driver of the car, 19-year-old Anthony R. Lazanis, had been drinking prior to the wreck.

Three teams made up of undercover authorities and “youthful looking” minors 18-20 years old fanned out across the city Friday night in search of convenience stores, Grandinetti said.

The minors, who rehearsed for their part, took beer or wine to the counter and tried to buy it while authorities watched.

If the clerk asked for identification, the decoys simply left the store.

If not, officials allowed the clerk to ring up the sale and then cited them for selling alcohol to a minor. They also issued citations to the business itself.

Robert Stamper of the Liquor Control Board said more citations were issued this year than in 1995, when 30 percent of the targeted businesses were cited.